From: Low Soo Mei (lowsm_at_bii.a-star.edu.sg)
Date: Thu Jun 25 2009 - 00:41:15 CDT

Thanks for the link, it is very helpful. My driver is indeed too old,
173.14.15 . Also, since this graphics card has 256 MB memory which is
also shared with normal display windowing, I'm now not sure if using its
GPU for computations would cause my display to die.
VMDCUDANODISPLAYGPUS maybe not useful since this card is the only
graphics card in this computer. Anyway, I'll leave it as CUDA-disabled
for now. Thanks very much again.

Cheers,
Soo Mei

John Stone wrote:
> Hi,
> Most likely you're running too old of an NVIDIA driver.
> VMD is compiled for CUDA 2.2, so you need to have a driver that's
> new enough for CUDA 2.2. Please see the CUDA acceleration notes here:
> http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/vmd/vmd-1.8.7/cuda.html
>
> Cheers,
> John Stone
> vmd_at_ks.uiuc.edu
>
> On Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 10:44:35AM +0800, Low Soo Mei wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> When I start up VMD, amongst the startup messages is this line "no CUDA
>> accelerator devices available". But I have an Nvidia GeForce 9600 GT
>> graphics card which is CUDA-competent. I installed my Linux x86_64
>> binary for vmd 1.8.7 beta 5 with the default configure options, which
>> are LINUXAMD64 OPENGL FLTK TK ACTC CUDA IMD LIBSBALL XINPUT LIBTACHYON
>> VRPN NETCDF TCL PYTHON PTHREADS NUMPY SILENT .
>>
>> Is there something I should be doing to get VMD to use my graphics card
>> GPU more productively?
>>
>> When I run BOINC Rosetta on this computer (in its idle time) the CUDA is
>> detected and I can see a noticeable speed-up in Rosetta computations.
>>
>> Thanks for the advice in advance.
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Soo Mei
>>
>
>